No man is an island. StocksCafe has come a long way with the support of many, many people and users.

Today, under the suggestion and support of an awesome user,
urameshi85, I am very happy to announce a new StocksCafe initiative -
StocksCafe Tutorials.

With new features being regularly added to StocksCafe but often not properly documented, the number one complaint from new users (especially new investors) is:
StocksCafe is too complex to use.

Urameshi85 decided to help StocksCafe solve this problem by volunteering to head an initiative to crowdsource tutorials on how to use StocksCafe. We started by discussing how to approach the problem and he went on to write out guidelines and even two detailed tutorials complete with screenshots.

Please support this initiative by contributing tutorials or simply suggesting tutorials that you would like to see.

What to buy next? - Part 2
There exists hundreds of stocks in SGX and deciding what to buy next is not an easy task. In part one of the "What to buy next?" article, I shared a few tools in SGXcafe designed to help me with this problem, including a new screener tool, Screener added to SGXcafe about 3 weeks ago. Screener was met with very positive response and high usage, and I received comments on how useful it was and requests ...

Updates: Visualization, Watchlist Limit, and Renamed Stocks
A quick update on a few tweaks around SGXcafe. One of the top feature requests recently in SGXcafe is having more visualization. Specifically, the ability to see at a glance how much dividends you receive monthly (against other years) historically and pie charts to see your portfolio's breakdown by sector, industry and companies. Feel free to suggest more if there is other information you'd like to ...

Future Yield
At the moment, one of the most highly voted features in Friends of SGXcafe is "Use various known methods to compute the intrinsic value of stocks". As much as I want to do it, it is not easy to compute the real "intrinsic" value of stocks, assuming it even exists. All methods that I have found require subjective opinions of the future. And often, small deviations in assumed values influence the results ...